not so very far from that Island is an airport where you can get flight connections almost around the worldit is a great number of species, even turtles who laying eggs in October every yearswater can you get from abundance from Amazon wells who are 0.5 metres under the surface, and a good place to supply waterElectricity is very easy(If we need it), just set up windmills, it is enough wind there to get it.temperature is very good, 30 degrees celsius on day the whole year, and 24 degrees on the nights.Humidity is 90%

The problem with Geraldo island was the fact that it is owned by a country which has very tricky immigration laws. As we have been shown, our situation has not been factored into any border control regulations, and we would need a dedicated immigration firm to help us get in.

I forget - how large is Geraldo again? We have done a lot of research on this in the past, and even used Geraldo as our case study in the dry run.

geraldo has been allready discussed here. and IIRC it has been rejected for several reasons (correct me if i'm wrong).despite the fact that migrating to brazil is quite tricky, home schooling is prohibited in brazil.not yet a problem, but if we manage to keep this up for fursther generations, it could actually be a big problem. at least a logistic problem.despite that: geraldo island is under preservation. therefore it could be difficult to establish a settlement there, not to speak of not being allowed to hunt.

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"All I ever wanted in my sorry-ass life was a single thing worth fighting for.""Sometimes your whole life boils down to one insane move."Atxkxe - I somehow love this word.

Man, this is tricky! Hawaii does have fairly manageable hunting laws (apart from having to wear a regulatory bright orange vest!!), and there are quite a few migration companies available.However, I have been talking to a land agent for one of the islands there, and the biggest problem for us seems to be land size. There are very few properties larger than 100 acres that are not simple housing estates.

I don't know - would we be able to purchase an empty property that is "ideal for housing", and simply not build on it?

It depends on what the land offers really, but I wouldn't be surprised if we could. I definitely don't think they'd MAKE us build houses, lol. But theres still the huge issue of land size. Can Hawaii really offer us what we need?

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